Baseline breast tissue characteristics determine the effect of tamoxifen on mammographic density change.
Marike GabrielssonMattias HammarströmJenny BergqvistKristina LångAnn H RosendahlSigne BorgquistRoxanna HellgrenKamila CzenePer HallPublished in: International journal of cancer (2024)
Tamoxifen prevents recurrence of breast cancer and is also approved for preventive, risk-reducing, therapy. Tamoxifen alters the breast tissue composition and decreases the mammographic density. We aimed to test if baseline breast tissue composition influences tamoxifen-associated density change. This biopsy-based study included 83 participants randomised to 6 months daily intake of placebo, 20, 10, 5, 2.5, or 1 mg tamoxifen. The study is nested within the double-blinded tamoxifen dose-determination trial Karolinska Mammography Project for Risk Prediction of Breast Cancer Intervention (KARISMA) Study. Ultrasound-guided core-needle breast biopsies were collected at baseline before starting treatment. Biopsies were quantified for epithelial, stromal, and adipose distributions, and epithelial and stromal expression of proliferation marker Ki67, oestrogen receptor (ER) and progesterone receptor (PR). Mammographic density was measured using STRATUS. We found that greater mammographic density at baseline was positively associated with stromal area and inversely associated with adipose area and stromal expression of ER. Premenopausal women had greater mammographic density and epithelial tissue, and expressed more epithelial Ki67, PR, and stromal PR, compared to postmenopausal women. In women treated with tamoxifen (1-20 mg), greater density decrease was associated with higher baseline density, epithelial Ki67, and stromal PR. Women who responded to tamoxifen with a density decrease had on average 17% higher baseline density and a 2.2-fold higher PR expression compared to non-responders. Our results indicate that features in the normal breast tissue before tamoxifen exposure influences the tamoxifen-associated density decrease, and that the age-associated difference in density change may be related to age-dependant differences in expression of Ki67 and PR.
Keyphrases
- estrogen receptor
- breast cancer cells
- breast cancer risk
- positive breast cancer
- postmenopausal women
- ultrasound guided
- bone marrow
- poor prognosis
- clinical trial
- adipose tissue
- randomized controlled trial
- radiation therapy
- magnetic resonance imaging
- signaling pathway
- stem cells
- body mass index
- high resolution
- type diabetes
- quality improvement
- study protocol
- computed tomography
- mesenchymal stem cells
- weight loss
- open label
- pregnant women
- neoadjuvant chemotherapy
- lymph node
- long non coding rna
- young adults
- body composition
- pregnancy outcomes